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Linguistic Theory in the Information Age: The Case of Allomorphy. Laura A. Janda and the CLEAR group at the University of Tromsø: Tore Nesset, Anna Baydimirova, Julia Kuznetsova, Olga Lyashevskaya, Anastasia Makarova, Svetlana Sokolova CLEAR = Cognitive Linguistics:
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Linguistic Theory in the Information Age: The Case of Allomorphy Laura A. Janda and the CLEAR group at the University of Tromsø: Tore Nesset, Anna Baydimirova, Julia Kuznetsova, Olga Lyashevskaya, Anastasia Makarova, Svetlana Sokolova CLEAR = Cognitive Linguistics: Empirical Approaches to Russian
Allomorphy: Traditional Definition • 2 or more morphemes • with same meaning • in complementary distribution (Bloomfield 1935: Chapters 10 & 13; Matthews 1974: Chapter V) • Usually these are morphemes that are etymologically related but have undergone sound changes in complementary environments
Еxamples of allomorphy • allomorphs of the root knig- ‘book’ in the following forms which differ in their final consonants: kniga [kn’ig-] (Nsg), knige [kn’ig’-] (Lsg), knig [kn’ik-] (Gpl), knižka [kn’iš- ] (dim Nsg), knižek [kn’iž-] (dim Gpl) • final segment of morpheme can be g, g’, k, š or ž • allomorphs of dative singular marker: studentu[u] ‘student’, studentke[e] ‘student (fem)’, dveri[i] ‘door’ • morpheme can be u, e or i
Еxamples of allomorphy • allomorphs of past tense marker: pisal[l] , pisala[l] , pisali[l’] ‘he, she, they wrote’; nes[Ø] , nesla[l] , nesli[l’]‘he, she, they carried’ • morpheme can be l, l’ or Ø • allomorphs of the plural marker in English: cat[s], dog[z], dress[ǝz], sheep, deer, fish • morpheme can be s, z, ǝz or Ø • allomorphs of the indefinite article in English: a cup, an idea • but one also finds examples like a elephant
But: reality is messy • Even many standard examples of allomorphy fail to conform to the strict definition. Instead we find: • the meaning is slightly different • the distribution is not perfectly complementary • And there are examples of form-meaning relationships that are usually overlooked
Range of conformity to criteria Non-identicalmeaning Both non-identicalmeaning and non-complementarydistribution Meaning Non-identical Third dimension: similarity of form Minimal or no deviation on both criteria Non-complementary distribution Identical Distribution Complementary Non-comp.
Хrapnul ‘He snored once’ An example: semelfactive verbs (meaning ‘do X once’) in Russian • The prefix-nu and suffix s- serve (approximately) as allomorphs in the formation of semelfactive verbs in Russian • NOT etymologically related • NOT identical meaning • NOT complementary distribution … but good candidates for non-prototypical allomorphy
-nu database • 296 imperfective verbs that form -nusemelfactives • collected by Аnastasia Маkarovа • data from Švedova et al. 1980, Zaliznjak 1980 and “Exploring Emptiness” database at UiT Plesnut’/pleskanut’ ‘splash once’ • includes both -nu and -anu semelfactives like pleskat’‘splash’ which forms plesnut’ and pleskanut’‘splash once’ • includes both reflexive and non-reflexive verbs like kačat’/kačnut’, kačat’sja/kačnut’sja ‘rock/rock once’
Sxitril? ‘Did he just do one sneaky thing?’ s- database • 105 Imperfective verbs that form s- semelfactives • collected by Laura Janda with help from Аnastasia Маkarovа • data from the 17-volume Academy Dictionary, Zaliznjak 1980 and Isačenko 1960 • includes eleven motion verbs such as xodit’/sxodit’‘walk/ walk someplace and come back once’ • includes both reflexive and non-reflexive verbs such as lovčit’/slovčit’, lovčit’sja/slovčit’sja ‘be cunning/do something cunning’
Are -nu and s- allomorphs? • Are -nu and s- in complementary distribution? • Almost: verb classes largely determine the distribution of -nu and s- • Do -nu and s- have the same meaning? • Almost: there are some verbs that use the two morphemes synonymously and Isačenko (1960) describes semelfactives formed with -nu and s- with the same term: odnokratnye‘one-time’
Are -nu and s- in complementary distribution? • The distribution of verb classes of imperfectives that form semelfactives with -nu vs. s- was analyzed by means of a chi-square test, and the results are statistically significant: • the chi-square value is 257.3with 5 df • the probability that this distribution is the result of mere chance is < 2.2e-16 (statistically = 0) • Cramer’s V (effect size) = 0.8 (very large)
Verb classes that prefer -nu non-prod 1. conj -aj -*ě Zevnul ‘He yawned once’ Svistnula ‘She whistled once’ Liznula ‘She licked once’
Verb classes that prefers- -i -*ěj -ova Sgrubil! ‘He did one rude thing!’ Smalodušestvoval ‘He did one cowardly thing’ Srobela? ‘Was she shy once?’
Complementary distribution: summary • The distribution is not perfect, but statistically it is pretty close • For two classes there is a perfect distribution: verbs in the non-productive 1. conjugation use only -nu, and verbs with -*ějuse only s- • For the other suffixes we see strong tendencies, but there is overlap, especially for verbs with the suffixes -ova and -i
Do -nu and s- have the same meaning? • Both can mean ‘do X once’ • One verb forms synonyms with both -nu and s-: xvastat’/хvastnut’/sxvastat’‘boast/boast once’ • A couple of verbs can use both -nu and s-simultaneously: metat’(sja)/smetnut’(sja), ‘leap sideways/leap sideways once’, trusit’/struxnut’, ‘be a coward/be a coward once’ Xvastnul ili sxvastal? ‘Did he boast once?’
-nu and s- are not identical in meaning • With -nu we usually have one cycle from a series of repeated events: čixat’/čixnut’‘sneeze/sneeze once’, lizat’/liznut’‘lick/lick once’ • With s- we often have something that only happened once malodušestvovat’/smalodušestvovat’‘act like a coward/act like a coward once’ Real series of events Potential series of events -nu s-
Are -nu and s- in complementary distribution? Do -nu and s- have the same meaning? Is the allomorphy hypothesis confirmed? Is the cluster model confirmed? Almost. Almost. Pretty much. Pretty much. Evaluation of the allomorphy hypothesis
Back to the big questions... • What constitutes allomorphy? • Complementary distribution is traditionally considered an all-or-nothing criterion for allomorphy. • But is this expectation realistic given that language phenomena often exhibit scalar characteristics? • And is meaning ever entirely identical?
The traditional definition... • was proposed long before the advent of electronic corpora and statistical software • perhaps should be re-evaluated as a prototype rather than as an absolute criterion • statistical methods make it possible to establish standards for evaluation of gradient phenomena • similar considerations might be appropriate for other definitions, such as those of allophony, markedness, and neutralization
“Neat Theories, Messy Realities” A project funded by the Norwegian Research Council 2011-2014 • Proposal: • Investigate a range of form-meaning relationships and how they do/do not conform to the def. of allomorphy • Establish standards for recognizing and rejecting allomorphy, thus optimizing our understanding of the structure of languages
Range of domains for complementary distribution • Phonological • Morphological • Constructional • Discourse functional • Sociolectal
Neat Theories, Messy Realities • Products: • Book: All About Allomorphy • Articles • Publicly Available Databases • Website with Interactive Pedagogical Materials • 2 PhD dissertations • Symposium “Allomorphy, discreteness, and continuity”2014
Examples of case studies completed or underway so far (CLEAR group) • s-/-nu semelfactives • Dropping vs. non-dropping –nu • Russian “empty” prefixes • prefix variation • constructional profiles of Locative Alternation verbs • radial construction profiles of “small” prefixes • semantic profiles of “big” prefixes
Examples of case studies completed or underway so far, dissertation by AB • Russian verbal morphology • prototypical allomorphy: ot/oto, raz/ras • non-prototypical: o/ob/obo, pere/pre, vz/voz, s/so, vy/iz • factitive verbs (deadjectival) with prefixes o, u, za, s, po, etc. • imperfectivizing suffixes a, va, iva
Examples of case studies completed or underway so far, dissertation by AM • Russian diminutives • Nouns: iško/oško; raz/ras • Adjectives: en’kij; (ov)atyj • Adverbs: en’ko/ečko • Verbs: • prefixes pri, vz, s, pro, po, pere + -nu • prefixes po, pri, pod + iva • kušan’kat’, spaten’kat’, bain’kat’